• 瀏覽: 1,781
  • 回覆: 9
  • 追帖: 1
Twitter and Facebook have uncovered and suspended a network of fake accounts that were believed to have been operated by the Chinese government. On Monday, both companies disclosed their investigations into the coordinated information operation, which was apparently intended to sow political discord around the protests taking place in Hong Kong.

According to Twitter, 936 accounts created within the People’s Republic of China were found to be “deliberately and specifically” sowing discord in Hong Kong in an attempt to undermine “the legitimacy and political positions of the protest movement on the ground.”
“All the accounts have been suspended for a range of violations of our platform manipulation policies,” Twitter said in the blog.

A tweet from one of the troll accounts.

The network discovered by Facebook was smaller. According to Nathaniel Gleicher, Facebook’s head of cybersecurity policy, seven pages, three groups, and five accounts traced back to China were removed after being found to have taken part in the information operation opposing the protests. About 15,500 accounts followed at least one of these pages, and 2,200 joined at least one of these groups.
Facebook and Twitter are forbidden in mainland China (but not in Hong Kong), and they’re only technically accessible to users who connect through a VPN.

Earlier this summer, protests broke out in Hong Kong opposing a Chinese bill that would allow people living within the special administrative region who are accused of crimes to be extradited to China for trial. Those protests have escalated in recent weeks, shutting down the city’s airport and filling public squares with crowds of more than a million people.
Twitter has drawn fire for accepting ads from Chinese state media in the midst of the conflict, with a number of promoted tweets from China Daily expressing similar skepticism about the protestors’ motives. In its blog post today, Twitter said it will no longer accept advertising from state-controlled media entities. Spokespeople for the platform said that state-backed media accounts will be “free to continue to use Twitter,” but their advertising abilities will be removed.
Unlike Twitter, Facebook did not announce any policy changes in response to the discovery. “We’re committed to continually improving to stay ahead,” Gleicher said. “That means building better technology, hiring more people and working more closely with law enforcement, security experts and other companies.”



https://www.google.com/amp/s/www ... n-operation-disinfo



用英文既好處係果班一蚊不值唔識睇

呢版野用google translate會狗唔搭八

所以唯有智識份子才可理解
又一事例,根本大陸係要操控香港人。
雜總想做搖控器,你甘願做一隻機械狗嗎?

[ 本帖最後由 ultra 於 2019-8-20 07:47 AM 編輯 ]



唔啱聽就block人acct,呢D就係尾式民煮豉油!


引用:
原帖由 我愛以前的香港 於 2019-8-20 10:06 AM 發表
唔啱聽就block人acct,呢D就係尾式民煮豉油!
妖言惑眾叫唔岩聽。。

又長知識了



[隱藏]
引用:
原帖由 ultra 於 2019-8-20 01:57 PM 發表



妖言惑眾叫唔岩聽。。

又長知識了
比D證據邊D post妖言惑衆呀,比個example睇吓吖!
講妖言惑衆邊夠毒果同L登呀!有排都唔夠班啦!



你個回既帖米係羅。。完美演繹

[ 本帖最後由 ultra 於 2019-8-20 02:22 PM 編輯 ]



引用:
原帖由 ultra 於 2019-8-20 02:21 PM 發表
你個回既帖米係羅。。完美演繹
無錯,你講就係啦!



引用:
原帖由 ultra 於 2019-8-20 07:36 發表
Twitter and Facebook have uncovered and suspended a network of fake accounts that were believed to have been operated by the Chinese government. On Monday, both companies disclosed their investigation ...
只能怪他們文宣太弱, 不懂傳疑時代不是浪得虛名



所謂言論自由 原來系容吾落異見者


[隱藏]
引用:
原帖由 翻墻少年 於 2019-8-20 04:33 PM 發表
所謂言論自由 原來系容吾落異見者
新手哥。。一日戶口。。哈。。



[按此隱藏 Google 建議的相符內容]